Statements

“Colombia has begun to show that another economic path is possible”

Economists, scholars and public policy figures from around the world sign an open letter in support of Colombia’s economic transformation under President Gustavo Petro
We, economists, scholars and public policy practitioners from around the world, write in recognition of the economic transformation undertaken by the government of President of Colombia, Gustavo Petro Urrego.

The neoliberal consensus that shaped development policy for more than three decades has fractured. For too long, countries of the Global South have been told that development requires familiar sacrifices: wages held down, labour protections weakened, public investment constrained, extractive industries protected and climate ambition deferred. Colombia has begun to chart another path. It is showing that an emerging economy can raise incomes, reduce poverty, strengthen labour, pursue democratic agrarian reform, recover industrial policy and begin a just energy transition at the same time. Its significance lies not in importing a model from elsewhere, but in building a  path aligned with the country’s own realities and the needs of its population.

Poverty fell from 36.6 percent in 2022 to 31.8 percent in 2024. By March 2026, Colombia’s national unemployment rate had fallen to 8.8 percent, down from 9.6 percent a year earlier; the lowest it has been in over 25 years while labour-force participation and the employment rate both increased. Labour’s share of national income rose from 38.9 percent in 2022 to 42.5 percent in 2024.

These figures mark a change in direction. Colombia’s previous growth model concentrated wealth, weakened workers, deepened informality and left the country vulnerable to financial pressure and extraction. The Petro government has sought to move the centre of gravity of the economy: moving from a model based on financial speculation to one centered on production, from the concentration of rents to the strengthening of labour, from territorial dispossession to the democratization of land, and from dependence on fossil fuels toward a just energy transition.

Agrarian reform has begun to confront one of the historic foundations of Colombia’s inequality and violence: the concentration and insecurity of land. By the end of 2025, more than 2.5 million hectares had moved through the reform. More than 750,000 hectares had been secured for access to land by peasant families, Indigenous communities and Afro-Colombian communities. A further 1.878 million hectares had been formalised, giving rural families legal security over land they live on and work. In practice, the reform means land for those excluded from it, title for those denied it, and a stronger basis for food production, rural investment, peace and territorial justice.

The government has also restored industrial policy to the centre of development strategy. Colombia’s National Reindustrialisation Policy seeks to diversify production, strengthen value chains, close productivity gaps and incorporate micro, small and popular economy units into a broader national project. Export data points in the same direction: in 2025, non-extractive goods exports reached US$26.39 billion, up 20 percent on the previous year, and accounted for 52.6 percent of the country’s goods exports.

Colombia has also begun to show that climate responsibility and development need not be placed in opposition. In 2022, the country had only a few hundred megawatts of operating solar and wind capacity. By February 2026, clean energy generation had reached 4 gigawatts, equivalent to 17.09 percent of the national electricity matrix. The transition is evident even within the state-owned company Ecopetrol itself. While still rooted in the hydrocarbons sector, the company has begun redefining itself as an integrated energy enterprise, acquiring the 205MW Windpeshi wind project and signing an agreement to purchase up to 1.3GW of solar and wind energy projects from Statkraft.

None of this removes the constraints Colombia faces. Fiscal pressures, debt, inflation, weak private investment and an international financial architecture organised around creditor power all remain real. But these constraints are not an argument for returning to the model that produced dependence, exclusion and vulnerability in the first place. Austerity, wage suppression, indiscriminate liberalisation and deeper extractive dependence would only deepen Colombia’s structural problems. 

The continuation of Colombia’s progressive economic project is of international importance. Iván Cepeda, selected as the presidential candidate of the Historic Pact, has pledged to carry forward the reform agenda opened by the Petro government. The choice belongs to the Colombian people. But Colombia’s democratic debate carries significance beyond its borders: whether a country of the Global South can consolidate a development strategy that joins redistribution, productive transformation, territorial peace, economic democracy and climate justice.

Latin America’s history is full of reforms interrupted before they could mature, often in the name of “economic responsibility” — a phrase that has frequently concealed the restoration of privilege. Colombia now stands at such a crossroads. To reverse the gains of recent years would mean returning to dependence, exclusion and rent extraction. To carry them forward would mean advancing a different trajectory: prosperity built through dignified work, democratic land reform, diversified production, public capacity and protection of the conditions of life.

Colombia has begun to show that another economic path is possible. That path should be defended, deepened and carried forward.

Signatories

Thomas Piketty

Jayati Ghosh

Ha-Joon Chang

Yanis Varoufakis

James K. Galbraith

Isabella Weber

Isabel Estevez

Jason Hickel

Prabhat Patnaik

Philip Alston

Raj Patel

Kohei Saito

Richard Kozul-Wright

Ann Pettifor

Fadhel Kaboub

Rafael Correa

Manuel Zelaya

Axel Kicillof

Andrés Arauz Galarza

Alberto Garzón Espinosa

Bettiana Díaz Rey

Christian Duarte

Jahiren Elizabeth Noriega Donoso

Rixi Ramona Moncada Godoy

Cecilia Rikap

José Miguel Ahumada

Gilad Isaacs

Louis-Philippe Rochon

Matias Vernengo 

Martín Abeles

José Dari Krein

Bruno De Conti

Monica Bruckmann

Daniel Chavez

Devika Dutt

Joel Wainwright

Guillermo Matamoros

Ladan Mehranvar

Will Stronge

Mat Lawrence
Jen Hassum

Neil Coleman

Duma Gqubule

Matti Kohonen

René Ramírez

Pablo Vommaro

Andrés Chiriboga

Consuelo Ahumada

Jaime Zuluaga

Marco Antonio Martins da Rocha

Gabriela Gallardo Lastra

Luciana Ghiotto

Orietta Favaro

Sabrina Fernandes

Pedro Páez Pérez

Christian Robles-Baez

Kristina Karlsson

Andres Bernal

César Alberto Sione
Esther Bemerguy de Albuquerque

Ira Regmi
Marie Therese Kane

Mercedes D'Alessandro

Marlon David Ochoa Martínez
Ana Rodriguez

Thamar Tuta Tovar

Emiliano González Giraldo

Available in
EnglishSpanish
Date
17.06.2026
Progressive
International
Privacy PolicyManage CookiesContribution SettingsJobs
Site and identity: Common Knowledge & Robbie Blundell